Actor Alan Dudley, who
voiced the character of Mr Gibson in “During Barty’s Party”, was born as Alan
John George Dudley in Greeenwhich, London in 1925. He trained at the Guildhall
School of Music and Drama and was active on the stage from the late 1940s as a
member of the Saga Repertory Company. By the 1950s he was appearing in West End
plays and musicals. It was during this period that he made his television debut
as a supporting artist when the BBC broadcast excerpts from the Piccadilly
Theatre production of the musical The Two
Bouquets (31st August 1953).
His TV career, often in small supporting roles, was secondary to his theatre
career. During the 1960s Dudley established himself as a reliable player, especially
in musical theatre productions and operettas. His singing ability also lent
itself to radio productions with Dudley gracing such productions as The Duenna (24th December
1964), a comic operetta which also featured Denis Quilley and Peter Pratt. During
1966 he also featured in a series of radio productions adapting the work of
Gilbert and Sullivan presented as complete performances. Of note is his appearance as Sir Despard Murgatroyd in Ruddigore (15th May 1966) opposite Dame Patricia Routledge and Peter Pratt. The clip below demonstrates his skill in such productions. Around this time he
began to be a regular presence in radio plays and productions and become a
member of the BBC Repertory Company[1].
He would become a familiar voice on radio and remain so until the twilight of
his career. During 1970 Anvil Records issued a series of audio adaptations of Sherlock
Holmes stories which starred Robert Hardy as Holmes and Nigel Stock as Watson.
Dudley was one member of a stock cast which featured as different characters
across several productions including “The Blue Carbuncle”, “The Norwood Builder” and “The Speckled Band”.
Dudley became a National Theatre player in the early 1970s and would remain part of the company for several years. Examples of work during this period included playing Leonardo under director Jonathan Miller in The Merchant of Venice (1970).
Dudley’s casting as Mr Gibson in Beasts would
have helped ground the production in the everyday. He was an extremely familiar
voice on the radio and his output in the medium during 1976 was indicative of
this with several productions playing directly prior or directly after “During
Barty’s Party” broadcast; Radio 3 Drama
Now instalment “Bandstand” (27th
April 1976), an episode of Radio 4 anthology drama series The Escapers entitled “The Spiritualists” (17th June
1976) and a lead role as Inspector Harvey in The Rippers Apprentice (22nd
July 1976).
After his final television appearance in 1980 he continued to feature heavily
in radio productions throughout the decade and until the end of his career. In 1981 he had small roles in two films - Chariots of Fire (1981) and Riding High (1981). Dudley died, aged 88, in Campbeltown, Scotland on 7th January 2013.
[1] Now known as the Radio Drama
Company (RDC) and founded in 1939 to act as a casting resource for radio
productions.
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